On 10/22/2011 01:18 AM, Hiroki Sato wrote:
Romain Tartière<rom...@freebsd.org>  wrote
   in<20111011101902.gb14...@blogreen.org>:

ro>  Hello!
ro>
ro>  On Mon, Oct 10, 2011 at 07:23:48AM -0500, Stephen Montgomery-Smith wrote:
ro>  >  On 10/10/2011 06:44 AM, Eitan Adler wrote:
ro>  >  >  Are there any plans on getting these committed to the mainline ports
ro>  >  >  tree? I'd be willing to work with you on that.
ro>  >
ro>  >  I agree with Eitan.
ro>
ro>  I would also be pleased to see TeXLive in the FreeBSD ports (obviously).
ro>  There are a few issues to sort out before however:
ro>    - The way TeXLive sources are distributed is not convenient: all
ro>      binaries are built and installed from a single sources tarball.
ro>      This leads to the "big" print/texlive-core but really lacks
ro>      scalability.  Back in 2008, Hiroki Sato was working on splitting all
ro>      this AFAICR.  Hiroki, I added you in Cc, can you please tell us if
ro>      you had any progress on this topic?

  I feel guilty about this because although I had/have several
  prototypes and plans to integrate TeXLive into the ports tree, it
  have not actually happened so far.  There were two obstacles in the
  work.  One was there were technical issues (compatibility-related)
  that prevented some existing TeX-related software we had in the ports
  tree from working.  This was in around 2007 but solved now.  Another
  one was how many ports we should have for TeX-related software.
  After testing several prototypes including a single port version, a
  set of ~2000 ports (one port for one macro), ~150 ports, or ~30
  ports, I think it seems good for us to have one of basic utilities,
  one for basic (stripped-down) macro sets as something like
  texlive-core + texlive-texmf, and the others for optional macro
  packages.  The basic idea is the same among them regardless of the
  total number of ports.  In practical, 100 would be the maximum
  number.

  So, primary issues described above were basically solved.  Although
  there are still trivial issues such as handling of a large distfile,
  it is not difficult to solve.  However, how to handle updating a
  macro package in the basic port is a problem to me and time passed
  when I was thinking about that.  More specifically, currently we have
  many latex-* and tex-* ports to install new macro packages or
  override the default ones.  It becomes complex over time.  Committing
  a single large TeXLive port is easy, but I do not want to create the
  same situation again in the new world and want consistency for
  updating a macro package in the distribution.  So, I wanted some
  compatibility with TeXLive's package management utility (tlmgr).
  Unfortunately it was too premature when I first looked into it
  (around 2007, IIRC).  The current version is much better than before,
  but I still need some investigation about that.  If we have or use
  reliable package catalogs of CTAN including file lists of each macro
  package via tlmgr or something, we can take an approach like BSDPAN,
  I think.

  A version based on TeXLive 2011 with a small number of ports can be
  committed if we ignore the last concern and clean up the current
  teTeX-related ports.  Any comments about that?

I wasn't quite sure what you meant by "the last concern." One concern that Romain brings up is that CTAN reroll their tarballs without updating the version number.

I really like the idea of a few small texlive ports. In particular, this will really cut down on the invocations of mktexlsr.

But what about this. Have one TeXlive port that installs installs the texlive installer (after building the binaries), and then it runs the texlive installer. The various options that the texlive installer has can be passed via config flags of the texlive port. Then the texlive port does a dynamic plist creation by doing a find on /usr/local/share/texlive (or whereever it is). And plist can also include an "@unexec rm -rf %P/share/texlive". plist also includes links to the binaries in share/texlive/bin/xxx, so that they will be removed upon deinstallation.

The current texlive installer on tug.org is not too bad, but it installs pre-made binaries, and on my system xdvi does not work because of dynamic library version conflicts. Also it doesn't delete the links it created in bin when it is deinstalled.

The current texlive ports created by Romain have a serious deficiency in that tlmgr doesn't work. And tlmgr is necessary to do things like set the page size.

Stephen
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